All language subtitles for 5) A Perfect Planet-Humans

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek Download
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish Download
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:33,679 --> 00:00:36,479 Life flourishes on planet Earth... 2 00:00:44,359 --> 00:00:47,520 ..thanks to powerful natural forces. 3 00:00:53,759 --> 00:00:57,039 The weather gives us predictable patterns of rainfall. 4 00:01:00,840 --> 00:01:05,280 Sunlight delivers energy to all parts of planet Earth's surface. 5 00:01:08,599 --> 00:01:12,400 Ocean currents carry nutrients around the globe. 6 00:01:16,879 --> 00:01:21,079 Volcanoes create and fertilise the land. 7 00:01:22,960 --> 00:01:27,400 Together, these forces have helped shape our living planet. 8 00:01:31,400 --> 00:01:33,096 But it's a fragile system. 9 00:01:33,120 --> 00:01:34,960 All right, come on, let's get him in. 10 00:01:40,799 --> 00:01:44,776 This baby elephant is dying of thirst. 11 00:01:44,799 --> 00:01:46,159 Big swallow. 12 00:01:48,439 --> 00:01:51,520 The latest casualty of our changing world. 13 00:01:56,079 --> 00:02:00,959 Luckily, rescuers have found him, so he has a chance. 14 00:02:08,680 --> 00:02:12,479 This young animal is likely a victim of a new force... 15 00:02:14,199 --> 00:02:18,159 ..one so powerful, it threatens the future of life on Earth. 16 00:02:35,800 --> 00:02:38,415 For over 60 years, I've been privileged 17 00:02:38,439 --> 00:02:41,800 to witness the natural world in all its wonder. 18 00:02:43,400 --> 00:02:48,840 But the planet I saw as a young man has changed beyond recognition. 19 00:02:50,479 --> 00:02:55,975 Human activity is now so dominant, it's disrupting the forces of nature 20 00:02:56,000 --> 00:02:59,879 and the vital habitats that life needs to survive on Earth. 21 00:03:01,240 --> 00:03:04,496 This is the most important story of our time. 22 00:03:04,520 --> 00:03:08,455 So I've asked three world authorities from the front line 23 00:03:08,479 --> 00:03:09,919 to join me in telling it. 24 00:03:11,960 --> 00:03:15,855 Humans used to be a species, just like any other on Earth. 25 00:03:15,879 --> 00:03:18,735 But we've now become so populous 26 00:03:18,759 --> 00:03:20,656 and so destructive 27 00:03:20,680 --> 00:03:23,400 that we are the single most influential creature on Earth. 28 00:03:24,479 --> 00:03:27,175 Everything around us is collapsing. 29 00:03:27,199 --> 00:03:30,056 This is the planet that we're handing over to future generations, 30 00:03:30,079 --> 00:03:33,256 and the worst part, I'll tell you the worst part, to me, 31 00:03:33,280 --> 00:03:35,735 is that they're going to turn around and be, like, 32 00:03:35,759 --> 00:03:38,456 "Why did you not do something when you had the chance?" 33 00:03:38,479 --> 00:03:43,376 We are likely to lose over half the species of life on Earth 34 00:03:43,400 --> 00:03:46,015 over the next eight decades. 35 00:03:46,039 --> 00:03:49,816 The last time we had an extinction event of this magnitude 36 00:03:49,840 --> 00:03:51,599 was 65 million years ago. 37 00:03:52,639 --> 00:03:54,336 We are asleep. 38 00:03:54,360 --> 00:03:57,560 We are not taking a look at the enormity of this event. 39 00:03:59,400 --> 00:04:02,975 If you want evidence of how life is struggling to cope 40 00:04:03,000 --> 00:04:04,919 in our rapidly changing world... 41 00:04:06,479 --> 00:04:09,840 ..you need to look no further than here in Africa. 42 00:04:14,159 --> 00:04:19,536 As we warm the planet, we create more extreme droughts and floods, 43 00:04:19,560 --> 00:04:23,160 making it increasingly difficult for many animals to survive. 44 00:04:25,879 --> 00:04:30,959 One of our planet's most magnificent creatures is no exception. 45 00:04:38,439 --> 00:04:42,879 Adult elephants drink around 200 litres of water a day. 46 00:04:48,519 --> 00:04:52,656 When rains fail, as they did recently here in Kenya, 47 00:04:52,680 --> 00:04:55,600 watering holes quickly run dry... 48 00:04:56,720 --> 00:04:58,199 ..killing hundreds of them. 49 00:05:07,800 --> 00:05:10,240 You can see the scale of the problem... 50 00:05:12,040 --> 00:05:16,519 ..by the dozens of orphaned baby elephants left behind. 51 00:05:20,759 --> 00:05:23,680 These are the lucky survivors. 52 00:05:27,399 --> 00:05:30,336 They owe their lives to Angela Sheldrick 53 00:05:30,360 --> 00:05:31,776 and her team, 54 00:05:31,800 --> 00:05:33,776 who rescue these young orphans. 55 00:05:33,800 --> 00:05:36,336 Come on! Come on, little boy. 56 00:05:36,360 --> 00:05:40,680 The orphans, when we find them, tend to be in a pretty sorry state. 57 00:05:48,279 --> 00:05:53,055 They are not only physically damaged but psychologically, too. 58 00:05:53,079 --> 00:05:56,096 Hey. Hello. 59 00:05:56,120 --> 00:06:00,615 They have suffered such a loss, losing their elephant family, 60 00:06:00,639 --> 00:06:02,319 their mothers. 61 00:06:04,800 --> 00:06:08,920 Angela's team do their best to soothe that loss. 62 00:06:19,079 --> 00:06:20,855 Come on. 63 00:06:20,879 --> 00:06:24,199 The keepers replace a lost elephant family. 64 00:06:37,879 --> 00:06:40,896 They provide the tender loving care and the nurturing 65 00:06:40,920 --> 00:06:43,600 that is so important for them to heal. 66 00:06:46,560 --> 00:06:49,439 The keepers are there 24/7. 67 00:06:55,800 --> 00:06:58,656 It is a very, very special relationship 68 00:06:58,680 --> 00:07:02,175 that actually does last a lifetime. 69 00:07:02,199 --> 00:07:04,096 Despite the elephants becoming wild, 70 00:07:04,120 --> 00:07:07,160 they do never forget that love and kindness. 71 00:07:12,279 --> 00:07:16,680 The orphans have to be bottle-fed eight times a day. 72 00:07:19,079 --> 00:07:21,336 We raise these orphaned elephants to ultimately 73 00:07:21,360 --> 00:07:23,399 go back to their birthright... 74 00:07:24,759 --> 00:07:26,759 ..a wild and happy life. 75 00:07:28,120 --> 00:07:29,680 You're such a clown! 76 00:07:35,240 --> 00:07:38,759 Hey! 77 00:07:41,840 --> 00:07:42,879 Come with me. 78 00:07:47,319 --> 00:07:49,295 Go on. Go on. 79 00:07:49,319 --> 00:07:52,175 So far, Angela's organisation 80 00:07:52,199 --> 00:07:56,255 has released more than 150 orphaned elephants 81 00:07:56,279 --> 00:07:58,096 back into the wild. 82 00:07:58,120 --> 00:08:03,896 But, to survive, they now need to live in managed reserves, 83 00:08:03,920 --> 00:08:07,920 where people top up water supplies when droughts return. 84 00:08:11,319 --> 00:08:14,879 Over the years, we've seen an enormous change in the weather patterns. 85 00:08:16,720 --> 00:08:18,240 Greater unpredictability. 86 00:08:19,680 --> 00:08:22,495 The drier seasons are drier and longer. 87 00:08:22,519 --> 00:08:24,896 It is the 11th hour now. 88 00:08:24,920 --> 00:08:28,216 We have just one home, 89 00:08:28,240 --> 00:08:32,039 and we, as the dominant species, should take care of it... 90 00:08:33,120 --> 00:08:34,456 ..must take care of it. 91 00:08:34,480 --> 00:08:36,000 It is our responsibility. 92 00:08:39,440 --> 00:08:43,176 What I need to say to people is, this is not going to get better. 93 00:08:43,200 --> 00:08:47,696 We are on a curve that's moving us with a series of events 94 00:08:47,720 --> 00:08:51,240 that's taking us into a new geological era in history. 95 00:08:55,360 --> 00:08:59,936 To understand how humans are destabilising our perfect planet, 96 00:08:59,960 --> 00:09:02,679 we need to look into the deep past. 97 00:09:04,840 --> 00:09:10,960 In Earth's long history, it's been through at least five mass extinction events. 98 00:09:12,879 --> 00:09:16,360 Most were caused by cataclysmic volcanic eruptions. 99 00:09:21,759 --> 00:09:25,440 It's not the lava or ash that wiped out life... 100 00:09:29,039 --> 00:09:33,336 ..but an invisible gas released by volcanoes 101 00:09:33,360 --> 00:09:35,039 called carbon dioxide... 102 00:09:39,759 --> 00:09:43,375 The single greatest extinction event on the planet so far was caused 103 00:09:43,399 --> 00:09:46,279 by the superheating of the world. 104 00:09:48,200 --> 00:09:52,495 Masses of volcanic activity pumped huge amounts of carbon into the atmosphere, 105 00:09:52,519 --> 00:09:54,855 massively raised the global temperature, 106 00:09:54,879 --> 00:09:59,879 and saw the destruction of around 90% of all life on Earth. 107 00:10:01,159 --> 00:10:04,840 Humanity is now acting like a super-volcano. 108 00:10:06,480 --> 00:10:10,696 We're releasing carbon dioxide at an even greater rate 109 00:10:10,720 --> 00:10:15,759 than the prehistoric mega-eruptions that extinguished life in the past. 110 00:10:24,000 --> 00:10:25,456 Here's the problem. 111 00:10:25,480 --> 00:10:28,135 Over the last two centuries, 112 00:10:28,159 --> 00:10:32,320 we dug up the burial grounds of a previous geological era in history... 113 00:10:33,840 --> 00:10:35,415 ..the Carboniferous era. 114 00:10:35,440 --> 00:10:39,056 And we took those dead remains, in the form of oil, 115 00:10:39,080 --> 00:10:41,855 gas and coal, and we made 116 00:10:41,879 --> 00:10:45,919 the entire industrial civilisation based on these fossil fuels. 117 00:10:52,440 --> 00:10:57,415 Almost every part of modern life depends on energy generated 118 00:10:57,440 --> 00:10:59,720 by burning these fossil fuels. 119 00:11:01,440 --> 00:11:04,639 And that produces CO2 in huge amounts. 120 00:11:07,799 --> 00:11:13,576 Globally, we now release 100 times more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere 121 00:11:13,600 --> 00:11:16,519 than all Earth's volcanoes combined. 122 00:11:17,519 --> 00:11:21,096 And by burning more fossil fuels, releasing more carbon dioxide, 123 00:11:21,120 --> 00:11:22,936 heating up the world around us, 124 00:11:22,960 --> 00:11:27,519 we have become one of the most powerful, destructive forces on the planet. 125 00:11:29,120 --> 00:11:32,855 Carbon dioxide acts like a blanket, 126 00:11:32,879 --> 00:11:35,096 trapping the sun's heat. 127 00:11:35,120 --> 00:11:37,415 This raises the temperature 128 00:11:37,440 --> 00:11:42,135 and so destabilises one of the most important forces on Earth - 129 00:11:42,159 --> 00:11:43,200 the weather. 130 00:11:49,000 --> 00:11:53,360 Many animals rely on predictable patterns of rainfall. 131 00:11:59,679 --> 00:12:03,960 But, as our world warms, our weather is changing. 132 00:12:08,039 --> 00:12:10,296 For every one degree that the temperature 133 00:12:10,320 --> 00:12:13,519 goes up on this planet because of CO2 emissions... 134 00:12:17,039 --> 00:12:20,360 ..the atmosphere is sucking up 7% more water. 135 00:12:23,039 --> 00:12:26,279 So we're getting more concentrated precipitation in the clouds... 136 00:12:28,240 --> 00:12:29,495 ..and more radical, 137 00:12:29,519 --> 00:12:33,120 extreme, unpredictable, out-of-control weather events. 138 00:12:36,960 --> 00:12:38,636 Millions are bracing 139 00:12:38,661 --> 00:12:36,936 for a hurricane the likes of 140 00:12:36,960 --> 00:12:40,336 which we've never seen. 141 00:12:40,360 --> 00:12:41,536 We're getting hurricanes 142 00:12:41,559 --> 00:12:45,919 that are devastating our ecosystems and killing human beings every year. 143 00:12:48,960 --> 00:12:52,159 They're now over and over and over again every season. 144 00:12:54,759 --> 00:12:57,655 This planet is more powerful 145 00:12:57,679 --> 00:12:58,720 than we thought. 146 00:13:03,000 --> 00:13:04,799 More fires, more droughts, more floods. 147 00:13:06,519 --> 00:13:09,296 And so this perfect planet of ours is now 148 00:13:09,320 --> 00:13:11,200 being thrown into a system of flux. 149 00:13:21,639 --> 00:13:23,775 These extreme conditions are making it 150 00:13:23,799 --> 00:13:26,159 increasingly difficult for animals to survive. 151 00:13:32,480 --> 00:13:35,879 And that is not just affecting wildlife. 152 00:13:40,039 --> 00:13:42,375 New research suggests that, 153 00:13:42,399 --> 00:13:45,536 for every one-degree rise in global temperatures, 154 00:13:45,559 --> 00:13:50,600 a billion people will be pushed into near unliveable extremes. 155 00:13:51,840 --> 00:13:57,279 And this could trigger one of the greatest human migrations in history. 156 00:13:59,759 --> 00:14:01,655 We're about to have climate refugees, 157 00:14:01,679 --> 00:14:04,895 forced out of uninhabitable areas of the world, 158 00:14:04,919 --> 00:14:06,200 pushed up into Europe. 159 00:14:10,480 --> 00:14:11,775 We are on the cusp 160 00:14:11,799 --> 00:14:15,456 of the biggest migratory pattern 161 00:14:15,480 --> 00:14:16,519 in human history. 162 00:14:18,279 --> 00:14:21,056 We're going to see millions, tens of millions 163 00:14:21,080 --> 00:14:23,536 and, unfortunately, hundreds of millions of people 164 00:14:23,559 --> 00:14:26,735 migrating from areas that are no longer liveable 165 00:14:26,759 --> 00:14:30,279 in the next 20, 30, 40, 50 and 60 years. 166 00:14:32,159 --> 00:14:33,895 And people are frightened 167 00:14:33,919 --> 00:14:37,080 because this is outside of our frame of reference. 168 00:14:42,519 --> 00:14:43,720 But there is hope. 169 00:14:46,799 --> 00:14:51,135 In Africa, the Sahara Desert is advancing southwards. 170 00:14:51,159 --> 00:14:57,120 But a remarkable project is aiming to stop it in its tracks. 171 00:15:03,879 --> 00:15:05,495 The ambitious goal 172 00:15:05,519 --> 00:15:09,775 is to plant over one billion drought-resistant trees, 173 00:15:09,799 --> 00:15:11,696 like acacias. 174 00:15:11,720 --> 00:15:14,096 Known as the Great Green Wall, 175 00:15:14,120 --> 00:15:18,895 once complete, a band of trees will stretch nearly 5,000 miles 176 00:15:18,919 --> 00:15:21,080 right across Africa... 177 00:15:22,720 --> 00:15:25,759 ..one of the largest living structures on the planet. 178 00:15:28,039 --> 00:15:31,135 These trees stop topsoil blowing away, 179 00:15:31,159 --> 00:15:33,855 and their roots penetrate the ground, 180 00:15:33,879 --> 00:15:36,216 creating a network of channels 181 00:15:36,240 --> 00:15:38,879 that store water whenever rain falls. 182 00:15:43,279 --> 00:15:47,480 Ten-year-old Korka is one of the first children to benefit. 183 00:15:59,879 --> 00:16:04,456 12 million trees have already been planted here in Senegal, 184 00:16:04,480 --> 00:16:06,799 and with dramatic results. 185 00:16:10,240 --> 00:16:13,720 Wells are filling again, allowing crops to grow. 186 00:16:42,120 --> 00:16:46,415 So far, only 15% of the Green Wall is complete, 187 00:16:46,440 --> 00:16:49,816 but it's already breathing life back into the land, 188 00:16:49,840 --> 00:16:51,775 stemming the exodus of people 189 00:16:51,799 --> 00:16:54,519 and keeping communities together. 190 00:16:59,519 --> 00:17:02,679 And the trees do something else for our children's future. 191 00:17:06,720 --> 00:17:08,256 As they grow, 192 00:17:08,279 --> 00:17:12,279 they remove carbon dioxide from the air. 193 00:17:16,480 --> 00:17:20,599 Carbon is the very foundation of life. 194 00:17:22,200 --> 00:17:24,400 Every plant absorbs it from the air... 195 00:17:27,000 --> 00:17:28,279 ..using it to grow. 196 00:17:31,359 --> 00:17:33,135 When animals eat these plants, 197 00:17:33,160 --> 00:17:37,839 some of this carbon is locked away in the fabric of their bodies. 198 00:17:41,880 --> 00:17:44,655 Together, these wild places, 199 00:17:44,680 --> 00:17:47,895 and the animals that allow them to thrive, 200 00:17:47,920 --> 00:17:51,759 take up over a third of the carbon dioxide we release. 201 00:17:54,240 --> 00:17:56,496 All of these systems, and the life within it, 202 00:17:56,519 --> 00:18:00,695 are so important to protect us 203 00:18:00,720 --> 00:18:02,119 from a warming planet. 204 00:18:07,640 --> 00:18:11,336 Some of the Earth's most important carbon stores 205 00:18:11,359 --> 00:18:14,816 are those rich in plant and animal species - 206 00:18:14,839 --> 00:18:17,319 the tropical jungles. 207 00:18:19,759 --> 00:18:21,375 Forests are sponges. 208 00:18:21,400 --> 00:18:24,175 They absorb enormous amounts of CO2 209 00:18:24,200 --> 00:18:26,480 from the atmosphere, and they trap that inside. 210 00:18:29,759 --> 00:18:32,855 Forests are about much more than just trees. 211 00:18:32,880 --> 00:18:36,920 In order to thrive, a jungle needs bustling animal communities. 212 00:18:38,160 --> 00:18:40,375 It needs insects to pollinate. 213 00:18:40,400 --> 00:18:42,695 It needs mammals to spread the seeds 214 00:18:42,720 --> 00:18:44,455 from one part of the forest to another. 215 00:18:44,480 --> 00:18:48,519 It needs this massive, tangled web of species interactions. 216 00:18:49,680 --> 00:18:51,056 A jungle rich in animals 217 00:18:51,079 --> 00:18:54,480 stores so much more carbon than a forest with little life. 218 00:18:59,799 --> 00:19:03,400 But many of the world's tropical jungles are under threat. 219 00:19:04,559 --> 00:19:09,839 And none more so than the greatest of them all - the Amazon rainforest. 220 00:19:14,000 --> 00:19:18,016 It's essential for the health of our planet, storing as much carbon 221 00:19:18,039 --> 00:19:23,720 as 25 years' worth of current emissions from all the cars in the world. 222 00:19:25,160 --> 00:19:29,096 The Amazon rainforest is one of the keystones of our climate. 223 00:19:29,119 --> 00:19:32,855 If we lose enough of the Amazon that it stops to function like that, 224 00:19:32,880 --> 00:19:37,119 then it's going to be an absolute disaster for civilisation, it really will. 225 00:19:42,000 --> 00:19:45,056 But urban expansion, cattle ranching 226 00:19:45,079 --> 00:19:48,976 and mining means that the forests of the Amazon 227 00:19:49,000 --> 00:19:51,799 are being lost at a frightening rate. 228 00:19:57,319 --> 00:20:00,695 It's not beyond the realms of possibility that we could 229 00:20:00,720 --> 00:20:02,895 deforest a rainforest, like the Amazon, 230 00:20:02,920 --> 00:20:05,135 so that trees cannot grow there 231 00:20:05,160 --> 00:20:06,599 and it turns into a savanna. 232 00:20:12,680 --> 00:20:16,976 Every minute, an area the size of about two football pitches 233 00:20:17,000 --> 00:20:19,215 is destroyed by humans. 234 00:20:19,240 --> 00:20:22,895 These amazing ecosystems around us - the oceans, the jungles, the forests, 235 00:20:22,920 --> 00:20:25,776 the mangroves - these are our greatest hope 236 00:20:25,799 --> 00:20:28,640 and our greatest buffers against a warming planet. 237 00:20:33,359 --> 00:20:36,336 On the front line in the heart of the Amazon 238 00:20:36,359 --> 00:20:38,720 stands of the city of Manaus. 239 00:20:40,720 --> 00:20:44,200 Here, urban expansion is eating into the jungle. 240 00:20:59,400 --> 00:21:02,536 Celina Pinage works for IPAAM, 241 00:21:02,559 --> 00:21:05,720 the Amazonas Environmental Protection Unit. 242 00:21:06,920 --> 00:21:10,016 Their mission is to save animals trapped in the city 243 00:21:10,039 --> 00:21:12,000 and to return them to the wild. 244 00:21:37,200 --> 00:21:40,736 Today, Celina is rescuing a sloth. 245 00:21:40,759 --> 00:21:43,695 It's the world's slowest mammal. 246 00:21:43,720 --> 00:21:47,256 Many become trapped as trees are cut down 247 00:21:47,279 --> 00:21:48,599 to make way for houses. 248 00:22:21,200 --> 00:22:25,960 Over 3,000 animals have been rescued in the past five years. 249 00:22:28,839 --> 00:22:33,175 Each one of these creatures is needed by the forest - 250 00:22:33,200 --> 00:22:36,536 to disperse seeds, pollinate plants 251 00:22:36,559 --> 00:22:40,519 or, like this jaguar, to keep herbivores in check. 252 00:22:50,440 --> 00:22:53,536 Whenever possible, Celina releases animals 253 00:22:53,559 --> 00:22:56,599 back into the protected areas of jungle. 254 00:23:24,440 --> 00:23:27,455 We don't just want to protect animals because they're interesting 255 00:23:27,480 --> 00:23:28,816 and they're beautiful. 256 00:23:28,839 --> 00:23:33,119 They're an integral part of a functioning planet, and we need to keep them around. 257 00:23:36,720 --> 00:23:41,016 So, how do we protect our remaining forests? 258 00:23:41,039 --> 00:23:45,480 Calculating their true environmental value could hold the key. 259 00:23:47,480 --> 00:23:51,920 And a new cutting-edge technology is beginning to do just that. 260 00:23:53,880 --> 00:23:59,096 It's led by a team from the Global Airborne Observatory. 261 00:23:59,119 --> 00:24:01,855 They've developed a way to quantify 262 00:24:01,880 --> 00:24:05,200 exactly how much carbon the forest stores. 263 00:24:08,880 --> 00:24:12,415 By firing high-powered lasers across the canopy, 264 00:24:12,440 --> 00:24:16,200 they can map the amount of carbon within each tree. 265 00:24:21,960 --> 00:24:26,720 The trees showing up as red and yellow are the most carbon-rich. 266 00:24:30,440 --> 00:24:35,000 These maps allow countries to see how valuable their forests are. 267 00:24:39,000 --> 00:24:41,816 I truly hope that we aren't too far away 268 00:24:41,839 --> 00:24:45,776 from realising the intrinsic value of wildlife, of forests, 269 00:24:45,799 --> 00:24:48,855 but we're not there yet and, for the time being, 270 00:24:48,880 --> 00:24:52,736 governments need to be financially incentivised to keep forests standing 271 00:24:52,759 --> 00:24:54,440 and to not cut them down. 272 00:24:58,799 --> 00:25:02,799 But what about areas of forest that have already been destroyed? 273 00:25:05,599 --> 00:25:09,319 In the Amazon, a revolutionary project is under way. 274 00:25:12,920 --> 00:25:15,776 The aim is to plant a new jungle 275 00:25:15,799 --> 00:25:19,319 of 73 million trees. 276 00:25:24,000 --> 00:25:29,119 But regrowing a species-rich forest has always proved difficult. 277 00:25:32,640 --> 00:25:37,976 So the project has turned to the indigenous peoples of the Amazon, 278 00:25:38,000 --> 00:25:40,960 and young women like Milene Alves. 279 00:26:00,480 --> 00:26:03,960 Milene's community has a unique knowledge of seeds. 280 00:26:09,279 --> 00:26:12,455 It's enabled them to collect over 200 281 00:26:12,480 --> 00:26:14,776 of the most important tree species 282 00:26:14,799 --> 00:26:16,359 from across the Amazon. 283 00:26:49,039 --> 00:26:51,336 By mixing the seeds together, 284 00:26:51,359 --> 00:26:55,640 it allows them to create a super-recipe known as a muvuca. 285 00:26:58,240 --> 00:27:01,256 In this mixture, there is enough tree variety 286 00:27:01,279 --> 00:27:04,079 to jump-start a new jungle. 287 00:27:06,839 --> 00:27:09,576 Every year, around 20 tonnes of seeds 288 00:27:09,599 --> 00:27:13,240 are scattered over acres of burnt and degraded land. 289 00:27:15,160 --> 00:27:16,655 After six years, 290 00:27:16,680 --> 00:27:19,135 they will have restored an area of forest 291 00:27:19,160 --> 00:27:22,720 the size of 30,000 football fields... 292 00:27:23,839 --> 00:27:28,160 ..the largest tropical restoration project in the world. 293 00:27:33,319 --> 00:27:35,175 The best thing we can possibly do 294 00:27:35,200 --> 00:27:38,536 to mitigate the effects of a warming planet is to plant more trees 295 00:27:38,559 --> 00:27:40,816 and protect those trees that we have. 296 00:27:40,839 --> 00:27:41,976 We can do this. 297 00:27:42,000 --> 00:27:44,816 If we put them back, we are creating 298 00:27:44,839 --> 00:27:47,175 that stable climate that we need to survive, 299 00:27:47,200 --> 00:27:48,736 and it's such an easy thing to do. 300 00:27:48,759 --> 00:27:53,695 Planting trees and saving wildlife is a vital solution on land, 301 00:27:53,720 --> 00:27:56,215 but it's only part of the story. 302 00:27:56,240 --> 00:27:58,415 The carbon dioxide we produce 303 00:27:58,440 --> 00:28:01,135 is damaging another crucial part of our planet - 304 00:28:01,160 --> 00:28:02,480 the oceans. 305 00:28:07,839 --> 00:28:10,680 Life cannot survive without them. 306 00:28:17,279 --> 00:28:19,615 The reason we can walk out and live 307 00:28:19,640 --> 00:28:23,480 and breathe oxygen is because it's generated in the oceans. 308 00:28:27,079 --> 00:28:31,976 The oceans produce up to 70% of the oxygen we breathe 309 00:28:32,000 --> 00:28:35,440 and feed over three billion people. 310 00:28:39,960 --> 00:28:41,935 Just like our forests, 311 00:28:41,960 --> 00:28:43,736 the plants and animals here 312 00:28:43,759 --> 00:28:47,039 absorb vast amounts of carbon from the atmosphere. 313 00:28:49,440 --> 00:28:52,440 And, when they die, it sinks down to the ocean floor. 314 00:28:55,920 --> 00:28:58,695 The ocean is what we call a carbon sink. 315 00:28:58,720 --> 00:29:00,895 Basically, it's a giant sponge 316 00:29:00,920 --> 00:29:03,455 that has forever been absorbing 317 00:29:03,480 --> 00:29:06,776 all the excess carbon from the atmosphere, 318 00:29:06,799 --> 00:29:09,200 taking it down to the depths and keeping it there. 319 00:29:10,400 --> 00:29:14,256 The most vital life forms that allow the ocean to do this 320 00:29:14,279 --> 00:29:16,256 are some of the tiniest, 321 00:29:16,279 --> 00:29:20,336 microscopic plant-like organisms - 322 00:29:20,359 --> 00:29:22,615 phytoplankton. 323 00:29:22,640 --> 00:29:25,855 Now, we don't pay much attention to the little teeny plankton, 324 00:29:25,880 --> 00:29:31,536 but plankton are the most important organisms for taking carbon dioxide 325 00:29:31,559 --> 00:29:34,079 and transforming it into oxygen for the planet. 326 00:29:35,480 --> 00:29:38,175 Phytoplankton are the base of the food chain 327 00:29:38,200 --> 00:29:40,215 on top of which everything else survives. 328 00:29:40,240 --> 00:29:42,135 The krill eats the phytoplankton, 329 00:29:42,160 --> 00:29:44,415 whales eat the krill, 330 00:29:44,440 --> 00:29:47,256 sharks eat the fish, and so on and so forth. 331 00:29:47,279 --> 00:29:51,135 We need phytoplankton for everything else in the oceans to survive, 332 00:29:51,160 --> 00:29:54,519 to trap that carbon and keep our climate cool. 333 00:29:55,680 --> 00:29:59,799 But some of these crucial phytoplankton are under attack. 334 00:30:05,519 --> 00:30:08,215 Since the start of the Industrial Revolution, 335 00:30:08,240 --> 00:30:13,400 the oceans have absorbed almost half of all our CO2 emissions. 336 00:30:14,519 --> 00:30:16,519 But that has come at a cost. 337 00:30:22,359 --> 00:30:27,279 When water absorbs carbon dioxide, it becomes more acidic. 338 00:30:29,960 --> 00:30:33,576 But the problem when you have this acidification 339 00:30:33,599 --> 00:30:36,296 is that shells are made of calcium carbonate, 340 00:30:36,319 --> 00:30:38,976 and, as you have this increased acidity in the oceans, 341 00:30:39,000 --> 00:30:41,016 it starts to dissolve these structures. 342 00:30:41,039 --> 00:30:45,135 That threatens anything with a shell. 343 00:30:45,160 --> 00:30:48,455 Our increasingly warm, acidic waters 344 00:30:48,480 --> 00:30:51,615 are not only destroying coral reefs 345 00:30:51,640 --> 00:30:54,455 but decimating some phytoplankton, 346 00:30:54,480 --> 00:30:58,960 the amount of which has fallen by as much as 40% in recent years. 347 00:31:00,759 --> 00:31:07,175 250 million years ago, the ocean also warmed and became more acidic, 348 00:31:07,200 --> 00:31:13,079 contributing to the mass extinction of around 96% of all marine life. 349 00:31:14,400 --> 00:31:17,695 If we have less phytoplankton, the base of every food web, 350 00:31:17,720 --> 00:31:20,200 you lose so much more of everything else. 351 00:31:22,480 --> 00:31:26,096 It is serious. If we have less phytoplankton, 352 00:31:26,119 --> 00:31:30,359 we have less oxygen, which is what we need to survive. 353 00:31:34,839 --> 00:31:36,776 And the oceans are being damaged 354 00:31:36,799 --> 00:31:37,839 in another way. 355 00:31:39,559 --> 00:31:42,256 Research suggests that overfishing 356 00:31:42,279 --> 00:31:47,375 has removed as much as 90% of all large predatory fish. 357 00:31:47,400 --> 00:31:51,976 And fewer fish means a marine system that stores 358 00:31:52,000 --> 00:31:53,039 less carbon. 359 00:31:54,039 --> 00:31:58,215 Ocean species are dying at a rate that's so fast 360 00:31:58,240 --> 00:32:01,400 that, if it were human beings, we would absolutely be terrified. 361 00:32:07,079 --> 00:32:09,200 But there is hope here, too. 362 00:32:12,440 --> 00:32:14,776 When areas of ocean are protected, 363 00:32:14,799 --> 00:32:17,559 marine life can recover. 364 00:32:21,240 --> 00:32:23,175 Here, off the coast of Gabon, 365 00:32:23,200 --> 00:32:26,296 they've created one of Earth's most ambitious networks 366 00:32:26,319 --> 00:32:28,599 of marine protected areas. 367 00:32:32,119 --> 00:32:35,880 It's a hot spot for breeding whales and dolphins... 368 00:32:38,839 --> 00:32:41,759 ..and one of the most important of all marine predators... 369 00:32:43,839 --> 00:32:44,880 ..sharks. 370 00:32:46,640 --> 00:32:51,576 Sharks prevent the species they feed on from becoming overabundant - 371 00:32:51,599 --> 00:32:55,839 an essential factor in maintaining our oceans' rich diversity. 372 00:32:57,400 --> 00:33:00,375 When people think about poaching in Africa, 373 00:33:00,400 --> 00:33:03,655 they think about elephants and rhinos and hippos 374 00:33:03,680 --> 00:33:06,455 and these great, majestic creatures on land. 375 00:33:06,480 --> 00:33:10,079 But there is poaching that's taking place at sea. 376 00:33:11,319 --> 00:33:14,096 The reason that I call these fishermen poachers 377 00:33:14,119 --> 00:33:18,256 is that they are taking wildlife without licence. 378 00:33:18,279 --> 00:33:19,935 Captain Peter Hammarstedt, 379 00:33:19,960 --> 00:33:22,935 who works for the conservation group Sea Shepherd, 380 00:33:22,960 --> 00:33:27,240 is patrolling the 20,000-square-mile marine park. 381 00:33:28,400 --> 00:33:31,935 Prepare boats for launch, prepare boats for launch. Thank you. 382 00:33:31,960 --> 00:33:36,615 They've spotted a commercial fishing boat on the edge of the park 383 00:33:36,640 --> 00:33:38,119 which needs investigating. 384 00:33:41,119 --> 00:33:44,096 The Gabonese government has joined forces with Peter's team 385 00:33:44,119 --> 00:33:45,960 to carry out boat inspections. 386 00:33:49,440 --> 00:33:52,776 The vessel may have a licence to fish here, 387 00:33:52,799 --> 00:33:55,096 but it could be taking more than its quota 388 00:33:55,119 --> 00:33:57,415 and catching protected species, 389 00:33:57,440 --> 00:34:00,160 like dolphins and sharks. 390 00:34:07,640 --> 00:34:09,815 When fighting a war to stop illegal fishing, 391 00:34:09,840 --> 00:34:13,119 the odds can seem insurmountable. 392 00:34:36,480 --> 00:34:39,215 This boat's fishing nets have pulled up 393 00:34:39,239 --> 00:34:41,559 threatened silky and blue sharks. 394 00:34:46,039 --> 00:34:48,655 Catching and keeping these creatures is illegal, 395 00:34:48,679 --> 00:34:52,335 so the fishermen must throw them back. 396 00:34:52,360 --> 00:34:54,856 But many are already so badly injured, 397 00:34:54,880 --> 00:34:57,119 they will not survive the ordeal. 398 00:34:58,559 --> 00:35:02,175 It saddens me greatly to see these incredible creatures 399 00:35:02,199 --> 00:35:06,896 being brutally manhandled as they're dragged across the deck, 400 00:35:06,920 --> 00:35:10,039 their fingers in their gills as they pull them. 401 00:35:15,400 --> 00:35:18,456 Globally, each year, millions of sharks 402 00:35:18,480 --> 00:35:21,135 and over 300,000 whales and dolphins 403 00:35:21,159 --> 00:35:24,175 are accidentally killed by fishing nets, 404 00:35:24,199 --> 00:35:27,376 seriously injuring the health of the oceans. 405 00:35:27,400 --> 00:35:31,159 It's the efficiency of these vessels that shocks me to the core... 406 00:35:33,079 --> 00:35:35,199 ..this sheer killing power of them. 407 00:35:37,199 --> 00:35:39,215 And you can really see 408 00:35:39,239 --> 00:35:42,639 why the oceans are being sucked dry of life. 409 00:35:57,760 --> 00:36:00,215 But the patrols are working. 410 00:36:00,239 --> 00:36:04,655 In the past three years, they have arrested 50 vessels 411 00:36:04,679 --> 00:36:06,199 and inspected hundreds more. 412 00:36:07,840 --> 00:36:10,175 Last year, we assisted the coastguard 413 00:36:10,199 --> 00:36:13,096 to arrest a vessel that was poaching sharks. 414 00:36:13,119 --> 00:36:15,615 And, by arresting this one single ship, 415 00:36:15,639 --> 00:36:19,639 we were able to save the lives of 250,000 sharks. 416 00:36:22,639 --> 00:36:25,599 Marine life here now has a chance. 417 00:36:28,400 --> 00:36:32,295 Currently, around 5% of the oceans are protected, 418 00:36:32,320 --> 00:36:36,800 but there's a global campaign to raise that to 30%. 419 00:36:37,960 --> 00:36:42,456 If we can do that, many of the planet's most vulnerable species 420 00:36:42,480 --> 00:36:44,496 could recover. 421 00:36:44,519 --> 00:36:49,639 And a healthier ocean has the power to absorb more CO2. 422 00:36:52,320 --> 00:36:54,016 We thought the ocean is 423 00:36:54,039 --> 00:36:58,360 this infinite space that is full of infinite resources... 424 00:37:00,079 --> 00:37:03,255 ..and this infinite capacity to 425 00:37:03,280 --> 00:37:06,280 withstand and tolerate everything that we throw at it. 426 00:37:08,480 --> 00:37:10,295 And I think we do need to... 427 00:37:10,320 --> 00:37:15,400 ..stop and reconsider our strategies if we want to move forward. 428 00:37:20,519 --> 00:37:24,496 Humans aren't just damaging life in the sea. 429 00:37:24,519 --> 00:37:29,119 We're also disturbing one of its most important forces... 430 00:37:33,679 --> 00:37:35,360 ..ocean currents. 431 00:37:39,599 --> 00:37:45,775 These transport essential nutrients to almost all marine creatures. 432 00:37:45,800 --> 00:37:47,376 We're dependent on 433 00:37:47,400 --> 00:37:50,079 these large circulation patterns that go on in our oceans. 434 00:37:51,519 --> 00:37:53,536 There's this continuous movement 435 00:37:53,559 --> 00:37:55,719 of beautiful cold water coming from the depths. 436 00:37:57,079 --> 00:37:58,376 It's chock-full of nutrients, 437 00:37:58,400 --> 00:38:00,159 it's chock-full of productivity. 438 00:38:01,199 --> 00:38:04,559 These currents begin at the poles. 439 00:38:06,519 --> 00:38:07,856 Here, cold, salty water, 440 00:38:07,880 --> 00:38:11,360 which is more dense, sinks to the depths... 441 00:38:12,719 --> 00:38:14,976 ..and flows towards the tropics 442 00:38:15,000 --> 00:38:16,159 and beyond. 443 00:38:19,440 --> 00:38:23,976 In the hotter parts of the Earth, warmer water rises and flows 444 00:38:24,000 --> 00:38:25,400 back towards the poles. 445 00:38:26,800 --> 00:38:29,775 This creates a global conveyor belt 446 00:38:29,800 --> 00:38:33,856 that circulates nutrients, oxygen and heat around our planet, 447 00:38:33,880 --> 00:38:36,599 regulating Earth's climate and weather. 448 00:38:38,320 --> 00:38:43,880 But it's now feared that our warming planet is destabilising the system. 449 00:38:45,760 --> 00:38:48,576 As you have an increase in ocean temperatures, 450 00:38:48,599 --> 00:38:50,335 it has impacts on everything. 451 00:38:50,360 --> 00:38:52,655 We have glaciers across the world and, as they melt, 452 00:38:52,679 --> 00:38:56,096 you have more of this fresh water just pushing into the oceans. 453 00:38:56,119 --> 00:39:00,175 And this fresh water is less saline, it's less salty, 454 00:39:00,199 --> 00:39:03,280 and that tends to float at the surface. 455 00:39:04,480 --> 00:39:07,896 And it's not moving. You don't have this circulation. 456 00:39:07,920 --> 00:39:09,280 It's causing a breakdown. 457 00:39:11,199 --> 00:39:14,976 Many animals depend on reliable ocean currents, 458 00:39:15,000 --> 00:39:16,896 so, as they change, 459 00:39:16,920 --> 00:39:18,960 the effect can be disastrous. 460 00:39:21,679 --> 00:39:23,135 This can be witnessed 461 00:39:23,159 --> 00:39:26,335 off the north-east coast of the United States, 462 00:39:26,360 --> 00:39:28,135 where it's thought to be triggering 463 00:39:28,159 --> 00:39:31,920 mass casualties of a critically endangered species. 464 00:39:33,360 --> 00:39:36,976 The fact that they're even here just stuns so many people. 465 00:39:37,000 --> 00:39:41,119 Bob Prescott heads up the emergency response team. 466 00:39:46,880 --> 00:39:50,175 We have about 250 people that walk beaches. 467 00:39:50,199 --> 00:39:52,440 They're looking for turtles in trouble. 468 00:39:54,199 --> 00:39:56,016 This week's frigid conditions 469 00:39:56,039 --> 00:39:58,135 have stunned sea turtles and left them 470 00:39:58,159 --> 00:40:00,376 stranded on beaches throughout the north-east. 471 00:40:00,400 --> 00:40:03,856 If you spot one, move the turtle above the high-tide line 472 00:40:03,880 --> 00:40:06,896 until a trained responder arrives. 473 00:40:06,920 --> 00:40:08,376 Timing is everything. 474 00:40:08,400 --> 00:40:10,735 If we can get to them within an hour 475 00:40:10,760 --> 00:40:12,695 of them washing up onto the beach, 476 00:40:12,719 --> 00:40:14,815 then we're going to be able to save 477 00:40:14,840 --> 00:40:16,760 90-95% of them. 478 00:40:18,320 --> 00:40:20,856 Here, off the coast of Boston, 479 00:40:20,880 --> 00:40:24,199 waters are warming faster than almost anywhere on Earth. 480 00:40:25,400 --> 00:40:28,695 It's thought to be causing turtles from the tropics to swim 481 00:40:28,719 --> 00:40:32,159 further north than ever before for summer feeding. 482 00:40:33,880 --> 00:40:36,416 But, when the cold autumn waters suddenly close in, 483 00:40:36,440 --> 00:40:38,440 the turtles go into shock. 484 00:40:41,840 --> 00:40:43,615 These are very young turtles. 485 00:40:43,639 --> 00:40:46,840 They're anywhere from one-and-a-half to six years old. 486 00:40:47,800 --> 00:40:50,295 When we find them, they're hypothermic, 487 00:40:50,320 --> 00:40:53,856 their heart is beating at one to five beats a minute. 488 00:40:53,880 --> 00:40:56,215 The blood is barely circulating. 489 00:40:56,239 --> 00:40:58,976 For all intents and purposes, look dead. 490 00:40:59,000 --> 00:41:00,496 The critically ill animals 491 00:41:00,519 --> 00:41:03,856 are rushed to the New England Aquarium near Boston. 492 00:41:03,880 --> 00:41:08,559 It has a state-of-the-art ER unit for turtles. 493 00:41:10,320 --> 00:41:12,295 We don't want to stress them any further, 494 00:41:12,320 --> 00:41:14,976 so we now treat the whole episode 495 00:41:15,000 --> 00:41:17,400 as sort of entering an ICU unit of a hospital. 496 00:41:18,440 --> 00:41:21,295 This is critical care for some turtles. 497 00:41:21,320 --> 00:41:25,135 He's pretty stiff. I can't get his mouth open much more. 498 00:41:25,159 --> 00:41:26,936 See, it's right there. 499 00:41:26,960 --> 00:41:28,480 Oh, there we are, there we are. 500 00:41:31,000 --> 00:41:34,376 When a turtle arrives, its condition is rapidly assessed. 501 00:41:34,400 --> 00:41:35,456 How are you doing? 502 00:41:35,481 --> 00:41:36,536 The animals are given 503 00:41:36,559 --> 00:41:38,896 stabilising drugs and fluids, 504 00:41:38,920 --> 00:41:41,295 their lungs are cleared of water 505 00:41:41,320 --> 00:41:43,639 and sand washed out of their scratched eyes. 506 00:41:46,679 --> 00:41:48,655 Got emergency meds. 507 00:41:48,679 --> 00:41:50,295 The veterinary team 508 00:41:50,320 --> 00:41:51,775 must ventilate turtles 509 00:41:51,800 --> 00:41:53,735 that are close to death 510 00:41:53,760 --> 00:41:55,695 to help them breathe. No response at all. 511 00:41:55,719 --> 00:42:00,800 But it's worth it for an animal that might live another 50 years. 512 00:42:02,559 --> 00:42:04,519 You want to save as many as you can. 513 00:42:05,519 --> 00:42:06,976 And it is depressing at times, 514 00:42:07,000 --> 00:42:08,559 cos a lot of them don't make it. 515 00:42:13,480 --> 00:42:16,719 You know, last year at Thanksgiving, we had 200 dead turtles. 516 00:42:21,159 --> 00:42:24,376 When you're looking into its eyes, it's looking back at you. 517 00:42:24,400 --> 00:42:26,039 There is a connection there. 518 00:42:27,280 --> 00:42:30,239 And it gets stronger and stronger as they start to recover. 519 00:42:33,079 --> 00:42:36,576 It can take months for the turtles to recuperate. 520 00:42:36,599 --> 00:42:37,976 But, once they do, 521 00:42:38,000 --> 00:42:41,615 they'll make the first plane flight of their lives. 522 00:42:41,639 --> 00:42:44,335 We have a big transport this morning - 523 00:42:44,360 --> 00:42:46,536 44 ridleys and one loggerhead. 524 00:42:46,559 --> 00:42:48,655 So we're going to start in 15B. 525 00:42:48,679 --> 00:42:50,599 All right, let's get to work! 526 00:42:52,639 --> 00:42:54,119 They are part of the planet. 527 00:42:55,159 --> 00:42:59,576 They're part of our very delicate web of life, if you will. 528 00:42:59,599 --> 00:43:02,735 38, 41, 44... 529 00:43:02,760 --> 00:43:05,496 The bottom line for all of these turtles 530 00:43:05,519 --> 00:43:07,920 is to get them back out into the water. 531 00:43:10,039 --> 00:43:12,239 We're doing great on timing, everybody. 532 00:43:16,239 --> 00:43:19,255 A very exciting day, cos it just brings that turtle 533 00:43:19,280 --> 00:43:22,400 one step closer to being released back into the wild. 534 00:43:23,960 --> 00:43:27,135 These mass casualties of our changing oceans 535 00:43:27,159 --> 00:43:31,135 are to be flown south to Florida and beyond. 536 00:43:31,159 --> 00:43:35,496 The future of this species depends on these young turtles... 537 00:43:35,519 --> 00:43:36,936 Ready. All right! 538 00:43:36,960 --> 00:43:38,056 ..which will be released 539 00:43:38,079 --> 00:43:41,519 into the warmer-water currents that they need to survive. 540 00:43:45,000 --> 00:43:47,416 It's a very emotional day for everybody. 541 00:43:47,440 --> 00:43:50,215 These are turtles that staff and volunteers at the aquarium 542 00:43:50,239 --> 00:43:52,639 have worked so hard to get them to that point. 543 00:44:12,800 --> 00:44:16,735 Changes in the ocean currents won't just harm turtles. 544 00:44:16,760 --> 00:44:21,576 With heat, oxygen and nutrients moving more slowly around the globe, 545 00:44:21,599 --> 00:44:24,815 the impact on all life could be dramatic. 546 00:44:24,840 --> 00:44:26,536 I mean, we live in a world where 547 00:44:26,559 --> 00:44:29,856 just one domino in a large game of dominoes... 548 00:44:29,880 --> 00:44:31,896 So you flick one piece, and you know what happens - 549 00:44:31,920 --> 00:44:33,496 everything starts to collapse. 550 00:44:33,519 --> 00:44:36,215 And that's exactly what we start to see over time 551 00:44:36,239 --> 00:44:37,840 as these conveyor belts slow down. 552 00:44:41,920 --> 00:44:46,960 Human activity is destroying the balance of our perfect planet... 553 00:44:49,159 --> 00:44:52,079 ..disturbing our oceans and disrupting our weather. 554 00:44:54,119 --> 00:44:56,760 But can we prevent the damage we're doing? 555 00:44:58,119 --> 00:45:00,576 Now the human population's at 7 billion. 556 00:45:00,599 --> 00:45:02,536 It's moving to 9 billion. 557 00:45:02,559 --> 00:45:04,576 And the problem is we're already using 558 00:45:04,599 --> 00:45:06,599 the equivalent of one-and-a-half Earths. 559 00:45:09,320 --> 00:45:10,480 It's not sustainable. 560 00:45:13,920 --> 00:45:16,335 Around 80% of the energy we use 561 00:45:16,360 --> 00:45:20,536 still comes from burning fossil fuels. 562 00:45:20,559 --> 00:45:23,840 It's what makes us so dangerous. 563 00:45:25,079 --> 00:45:29,416 We can reduce CO2 emissions by consuming less 564 00:45:29,440 --> 00:45:33,255 or reusing some of our resources. 565 00:45:33,280 --> 00:45:35,775 But the biggest saving we could make 566 00:45:35,800 --> 00:45:39,280 would be to stop using fossil fuels for our energy. 567 00:45:40,320 --> 00:45:42,416 And there are many people who think 568 00:45:42,440 --> 00:45:46,536 that we could exploit the natural forces of the planet 569 00:45:46,559 --> 00:45:48,119 to enable us to do that. 570 00:45:53,000 --> 00:45:56,016 The sun has not sent us a bill. 571 00:45:56,039 --> 00:45:58,159 The wind has not invoiced us. 572 00:46:01,800 --> 00:46:06,135 Coal, oil, gas, uranium - they're expensive. 573 00:46:06,159 --> 00:46:07,559 The sun and the wind is free. 574 00:46:12,920 --> 00:46:15,960 We live in a planet that's incredibly dynamic. 575 00:46:21,280 --> 00:46:22,695 We all live in environments 576 00:46:22,719 --> 00:46:25,615 where there is some source of energy that we can tap into. 577 00:46:25,639 --> 00:46:28,320 There's energy, there's power all around us. 578 00:46:34,559 --> 00:46:36,815 And we need to start looking at 579 00:46:36,840 --> 00:46:38,936 these natural sources of energy 580 00:46:38,960 --> 00:46:41,480 that don't have that negative impact. 581 00:46:47,840 --> 00:46:51,496 We have more energy than we'll ever know what to do with. 582 00:46:51,519 --> 00:46:53,016 We can power the whole world 583 00:46:53,039 --> 00:46:57,335 with just a fraction of the solar and wind that we get every year - 584 00:46:57,360 --> 00:46:58,400 a fraction of it! 585 00:47:05,440 --> 00:47:08,175 We're not going to start needing less power any time soon. 586 00:47:08,199 --> 00:47:11,335 We're just going to have to shift how we generate that power 587 00:47:11,360 --> 00:47:14,400 from non-renewables to renewables. 588 00:47:20,599 --> 00:47:22,000 Volcanic heat. 589 00:47:23,039 --> 00:47:25,376 So far, we've only tapped 590 00:47:25,400 --> 00:47:27,719 some 7% of its global potential. 591 00:47:30,440 --> 00:47:32,599 Or the wind in our skies. 592 00:47:34,519 --> 00:47:35,976 That could provide 593 00:47:36,000 --> 00:47:38,840 30% of our energy by 2050. 594 00:47:42,199 --> 00:47:44,655 And the power of the sun, 595 00:47:44,679 --> 00:47:47,199 which is virtually unlimited. 596 00:47:49,639 --> 00:47:53,039 In areas where most life struggles to survive... 597 00:47:55,760 --> 00:48:00,159 ..there is plenty of space to gather the maximum solar energy. 598 00:48:02,199 --> 00:48:05,815 The northern Sahara, home to the world's largest 599 00:48:05,840 --> 00:48:08,400 concentrated solar power plant. 600 00:48:12,800 --> 00:48:15,175 Here, innovative technology 601 00:48:15,199 --> 00:48:18,416 is using mirrors to superheat a special liquid 602 00:48:18,440 --> 00:48:21,320 to around 400 degrees Celsius. 603 00:48:22,920 --> 00:48:25,295 This heat is then stored in molten salt, 604 00:48:25,320 --> 00:48:30,295 allowing something not possible before - 605 00:48:30,320 --> 00:48:32,735 the ability to power steam turbines 606 00:48:32,760 --> 00:48:35,440 with the sun's energy during the night. 607 00:48:36,480 --> 00:48:40,096 It creates green electricity 24 hours a day, 608 00:48:40,119 --> 00:48:43,760 feeding Morocco's growing energy needs. 609 00:48:45,119 --> 00:48:47,760 And it has plans to supply Europe. 610 00:48:49,079 --> 00:48:51,896 We need to make enormous shifts in our society. 611 00:48:51,920 --> 00:48:53,815 This is starting, 612 00:48:53,840 --> 00:48:55,936 but it's happening just in small places. 613 00:48:55,960 --> 00:48:57,615 It needs to happen everywhere, 614 00:48:57,639 --> 00:48:59,856 and it needs to happen much, much faster. 615 00:48:59,880 --> 00:49:02,016 There's really no excuse. 616 00:49:02,039 --> 00:49:04,079 The Earth has all of the power we need. 617 00:49:05,639 --> 00:49:08,016 Our mission is not growth, growth, growth, 618 00:49:08,039 --> 00:49:09,896 but sustainability, 619 00:49:09,920 --> 00:49:15,016 and that our responsibility is to steward this planet. 620 00:49:15,039 --> 00:49:16,440 That's the mission at hand. 621 00:49:18,519 --> 00:49:21,536 But is this transition to a low-carbon society 622 00:49:21,559 --> 00:49:23,760 happening fast enough? 623 00:49:29,159 --> 00:49:33,096 In 2015, 195 of the world's nations 624 00:49:33,119 --> 00:49:37,519 pledged to reduce their carbon dioxide emissions. 625 00:49:40,440 --> 00:49:43,096 To avoid planetary disaster, 626 00:49:43,119 --> 00:49:46,376 the goal was to limit the warming of the Earth 627 00:49:46,400 --> 00:49:48,400 to well below two degrees. 628 00:49:50,239 --> 00:49:52,295 Together, citizens of the world, 629 00:49:52,320 --> 00:49:55,920 we will work to save our planet from ourselves. 630 00:49:58,480 --> 00:50:00,777 Today's a historic day 631 00:50:00,800 --> 00:50:03,096 in the fight to protect our planet. 632 00:50:03,119 --> 00:50:06,039 You'll either be lauded by future generations... 633 00:50:07,360 --> 00:50:09,159 ..or vilified by them. 634 00:50:12,360 --> 00:50:14,576 To get an accurate reading 635 00:50:14,599 --> 00:50:16,655 of CO2 levels in the Earth's atmosphere, 636 00:50:16,679 --> 00:50:20,735 you must be far away from the pollution of the cities. 637 00:50:20,760 --> 00:50:23,096 So, in the heart of the Amazon, 638 00:50:23,119 --> 00:50:28,936 they built a 325-metre tower to do just that. 639 00:50:28,960 --> 00:50:32,576 It's one of a number of towers around the planet 640 00:50:32,599 --> 00:50:34,496 collecting vital data, 641 00:50:34,519 --> 00:50:37,056 and the news is not good. 642 00:50:37,079 --> 00:50:39,896 This year, CO2 levels in the atmosphere 643 00:50:39,920 --> 00:50:43,440 went up yet again, hitting another record high. 644 00:50:49,039 --> 00:50:51,896 I think we are in a crisis. I'm not going to mince my words. 645 00:50:51,920 --> 00:50:53,775 We are in a crisis right now. 646 00:50:53,800 --> 00:50:57,416 We are pushing the equilibrium that the planet used to be in 647 00:50:57,440 --> 00:50:59,679 in a way that may be unrecoverable. 648 00:51:02,440 --> 00:51:04,335 And what the scientists are telling us is 649 00:51:04,360 --> 00:51:08,615 we will face a runaway cascade of environmental events 650 00:51:08,639 --> 00:51:13,335 feeding off each other, taking us into an unknown abyss 651 00:51:13,360 --> 00:51:15,815 that could lead to a very quick mass extinction 652 00:51:15,840 --> 00:51:17,295 of much of life on this Earth 653 00:51:17,320 --> 00:51:19,559 in a very, very short period of time. 654 00:51:21,599 --> 00:51:23,976 Species are becoming extinct 655 00:51:24,000 --> 00:51:27,599 around 100 times faster than the normal rate. 656 00:51:28,840 --> 00:51:30,496 So rapid is the loss 657 00:51:30,519 --> 00:51:33,559 that zoos around the world are taking drastic action. 658 00:51:35,360 --> 00:51:38,815 They're collecting DNA from endangered species 659 00:51:38,840 --> 00:51:42,519 to build a genetic store of life before they go extinct. 660 00:51:44,400 --> 00:51:48,496 At Edinburgh Zoo, a health check on a Diana monkey 661 00:51:48,519 --> 00:51:50,976 presents a valuable opportunity 662 00:51:51,000 --> 00:51:55,559 to collect a sample for the European network of biobanks. 663 00:52:00,039 --> 00:52:05,335 We really feel the pressure to bank as many species as we can 664 00:52:05,360 --> 00:52:09,536 as fast as we can before it's too late. 665 00:52:09,559 --> 00:52:12,376 Marlys Houck at San Diego Zoo 666 00:52:12,400 --> 00:52:16,360 receives DNA samples from all over the world. 667 00:52:17,800 --> 00:52:20,400 She's taking them to a secure vault. 668 00:52:24,480 --> 00:52:27,000 It's known as the Frozen Zoo. 669 00:52:28,239 --> 00:52:30,135 It's hard to imagine, 670 00:52:30,159 --> 00:52:33,096 but there's probably more vertebrate life in that room 671 00:52:33,119 --> 00:52:35,000 than anywhere else on the planet. 672 00:52:38,960 --> 00:52:42,295 We get samples every day. It might be a tiger, 673 00:52:42,320 --> 00:52:45,760 it might be a bear, it might be a rare reptile. 674 00:52:47,320 --> 00:52:52,079 Right now, we have over 10,000 individuals represented. 675 00:52:57,119 --> 00:52:59,976 The living cells of our world's rarest animals 676 00:53:00,000 --> 00:53:04,360 are being stored here at minus-200 degrees Celsius... 677 00:53:06,400 --> 00:53:10,695 ..keeping their DNA viable indefinitely, 678 00:53:10,719 --> 00:53:12,360 just in case the worst happens. 679 00:53:14,719 --> 00:53:18,456 There are multiple frozen zoos like this around the world 680 00:53:18,480 --> 00:53:20,775 and, with extinction rates so high, 681 00:53:20,800 --> 00:53:23,840 they might be needed sooner than we thought. 682 00:53:28,000 --> 00:53:30,815 I hope that we never have to see 683 00:53:30,840 --> 00:53:33,599 extinction of some of these amazing species. 684 00:53:37,679 --> 00:53:40,175 But, if we do, the samples in the Frozen Zoo 685 00:53:40,199 --> 00:53:44,096 might be the hope for bringing them back, so that... 686 00:53:44,119 --> 00:53:46,896 ..our children and grandchildren 687 00:53:46,920 --> 00:53:49,255 could once again 688 00:53:49,280 --> 00:53:51,856 see the actual animals. 689 00:53:51,880 --> 00:53:56,335 Not knowing what the planet will be like when I'm an adult, 690 00:53:56,360 --> 00:53:58,775 not knowing whether it will be capable of sustaining life - 691 00:53:58,800 --> 00:54:01,800 that is a terrifying thing to face. 692 00:54:05,760 --> 00:54:07,775 I think the planet that I've been born into 693 00:54:07,800 --> 00:54:10,135 is the most beautiful place that I could ever imagine. 694 00:54:10,159 --> 00:54:13,255 It's full of amazing wildlife... 695 00:54:13,280 --> 00:54:16,000 ..and us - humans are incredible. 696 00:54:19,079 --> 00:54:22,856 But we seem to forget that the place that we live in is finite 697 00:54:22,880 --> 00:54:27,400 and very vulnerable, and it seems to be dying before our eyes. 698 00:54:33,800 --> 00:54:37,655 Since the age of ten, I've been hearing about our warming world, 699 00:54:37,679 --> 00:54:39,335 but nothing was really done at that time. 700 00:54:39,360 --> 00:54:42,280 All I observed at that time was sort of mass apathy. 701 00:54:45,719 --> 00:54:47,856 But what is positive is that the youth 702 00:54:47,880 --> 00:54:49,655 are standing up and are taking leadership. 703 00:54:49,679 --> 00:54:51,376 Save our planet! 704 00:54:51,400 --> 00:54:53,496 Save our planet! 705 00:54:53,519 --> 00:54:55,376 Save our planet! 706 00:54:55,400 --> 00:54:56,856 We need more people to care. 707 00:54:56,880 --> 00:54:59,536 We need more people to look at the facts and say, 708 00:54:59,559 --> 00:55:01,400 "I will do something about this." 709 00:55:03,840 --> 00:55:05,896 Whose future? Our future! 710 00:55:05,920 --> 00:55:07,496 Whose planet? Our planet! 711 00:55:07,519 --> 00:55:08,615 Whose future? 712 00:55:08,639 --> 00:55:13,175 So we need to think about how we interact with the natural world. 713 00:55:13,199 --> 00:55:15,376 We need to view it not as a commodity 714 00:55:15,400 --> 00:55:17,599 but as a system that we are a part of... 715 00:55:27,800 --> 00:55:29,856 ..because we are inextricably linked 716 00:55:29,880 --> 00:55:32,295 to the natural world, and whatever happens 717 00:55:32,320 --> 00:55:34,096 to the oceans, 718 00:55:34,119 --> 00:55:36,976 whatever happens to the forests, 719 00:55:37,000 --> 00:55:40,056 whatever happens to the deserts, that will come back 720 00:55:40,079 --> 00:55:41,880 and it will happen to us. 721 00:55:55,559 --> 00:55:58,936 Right now, we have the capacity and knowledge 722 00:55:58,960 --> 00:56:01,280 to stop the damage we are doing. 723 00:56:03,280 --> 00:56:05,175 But what we don't have 724 00:56:05,199 --> 00:56:06,599 is time. 725 00:56:08,280 --> 00:56:11,096 My inspiration and hope for the future 726 00:56:11,119 --> 00:56:14,976 lies with the next generation. 727 00:56:15,000 --> 00:56:19,615 But we all have a responsibility to reduce our carbon footprints, 728 00:56:19,639 --> 00:56:22,295 harness the forces of nature for our energy 729 00:56:22,320 --> 00:56:25,335 and protect the natural world. 730 00:56:25,360 --> 00:56:29,376 The survival of humanity and our fellow creatures on Earth 731 00:56:29,400 --> 00:56:30,960 depends upon it. 732 00:56:32,039 --> 00:56:33,976 Do you want to be the last generation 733 00:56:34,000 --> 00:56:36,856 that signed the death certificate of humanity? 734 00:56:36,880 --> 00:56:40,456 Do you want to be the generation that sees the last elephant killed? 735 00:56:40,480 --> 00:56:41,976 Do you want to be the generation 736 00:56:42,000 --> 00:56:44,215 that sees the last fish fished out of the sea? 737 00:56:44,239 --> 00:56:45,775 Or do you want to be the generation 738 00:56:45,800 --> 00:56:47,775 and the individuals that turned it around? 739 00:56:47,800 --> 00:56:51,016 This is the single most serious moment 740 00:56:51,039 --> 00:56:56,056 in the 200,000 years that our species has been on this Earth. 741 00:56:56,079 --> 00:56:58,496 I see reason to hope. 742 00:56:58,519 --> 00:57:01,175 And I think we can. 743 00:57:01,199 --> 00:57:05,615 I think we humans, we are incredibly intelligent animals, 744 00:57:05,639 --> 00:57:06,936 and we can, 745 00:57:06,960 --> 00:57:08,376 and we will, 746 00:57:08,400 --> 00:57:09,880 if we set our minds to it. 747 00:57:14,400 --> 00:57:17,615 The Open University has produced a free poster 748 00:57:17,639 --> 00:57:21,119 exploring our perfect planet. To order, please call... 749 00:57:25,119 --> 00:57:26,159 ..or go to... 750 00:57:30,280 --> 00:57:32,719 ..and follow the links to the Open University. 61189

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.